google: cordwood masonry.... cob is another great alternative. I wont go into details here about these building techniques, there is alot of info on the web. I have built a cordwood cabin with a living roof. If u want any help. i might be able to assist. I have also done some small projects using cob..as well as a cordwood / cob hybrid.

What you need is a good ol scrounger instinct, and an unlimited supply of sweat equity.

Built my first mostly traditional home on only 7K. 90% of the materials (outside of the roof and slab) were scrounged, or discounted.

I've been re-scrounging ever since...now I've got 20 years more scrounged material, and instead of building another barn to put the stuff, I'm building...

I've saved enough money for the slab and new roofing materials....

I won't be borrowing any money.

As for your particular situation... remodeling is twice as expensive as building from scratch... if you're paying someone... if you're DIY, you could save a lot of money, if you're scrounging all the 'new' parts...

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google: cordwood masonry.... cob is another great alternative. I wont go into details here about these building techniques, there is alot of info on the web. I have built a cordwood cabin with a living roof. If u want any help. i might be able to assist. I have also done some small projects using cob..as well as a cordwood / cob hybrid.

pEaCe

other than the attractive costs of cordwood construction, i absolutely love the look of it. it is by far my favorite alternative building.

I would suggest barns, these buildings are prefabed ,have stood for 100 years or more and are availiable nearly everywhere,plus have a desireable resale value. There are very efficient methods to semi-dismantle and move to make them cost effective. Insulation added, windows and doors sawn in where desired,As for size, well 40x100 some larger. The trick is to cut the unit you desire from the larger original biulding. I have done several and there is a sizeable cost savings as many times the building can be obtained for free.
Carefull planning will allow single or multi story rebuilds.
One thing to check is if you have a building department make sure they don't freakout over reclaimed material, I have been held up several times because of reclaimed.Had to have the material graded by a certified lumber grader and engineering done.
Good Luck

People are always looking for that alternate cheap as dirt house. Lots of neat ways of costructing things. Iv'e built most of them. Yurts,Domes,Post& Beam, Pole Barn, Etc. But the common stick built ranch is the best deal going. Especially with lumber as cheap as it is. It can be up and under roof in 10 days or less. It can be sealed up tight to keep the bugs out and use less energy. And if you can do like Texican said it can be cheaper. Anything else is gonna be buggy,drafty and a lot of work and constant maintenance. IF ya got a lot of time, like to work on your house forever and don't plan on living there for more than 10 or so years then do one of the alternatives.

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I dont know where u r Tnhermit but lumber is far from cheap here. Cordwood lends itself to many advantages. No straight trees need to cut as with conventional build. CW is also a truly owner/builder friendly, even those without any construction experience. CW also has amazing R-values, is almost fireproof, Has been used for hundreds if not thousands of years. Im not an authority on CW or cob just owner/builder. Id look into Rob Roy, Jack Henstridge they both have excellent books as well as hands on traing courses if u so desire. I was able to build a 12x24 CW cabin with a living roof , with no mechanical assistance other than a chainsaw and a pick-up truck for hauling. We built this cabin in under 3 months. Underroof, it was warm a cozy. It felt like u were in a fortress. Someone said bulletproof might seem appealing..well with CW u can use up to 24" log sections ..making the wall 2 foot thick!! Hows that for bullet proof? There is even a technique for severly cold climates where a double wall of 24" logs are laid making it a total of 4ft thick!!! In my opinion stick built homes are a waste of materials and they r very inefficeint when it comes to heating and cooling. BTW it took us 1 1/2 cords of wood to heat that cabin for 4 months thru an ohio winter hows that for effient ?

I dont know where u r Tnhermit but lumber is far from cheap here. Cordwood lends itself to many advantages. No straight trees need to cut as with conventional build. CW is also a truly owner/builder friendly, even those without any construction experience. CW also has amazing R-values, is almost fireproof, Has been used for hundreds if not thousands of years. Im not an authority on CW or cob just owner/builder. Id look into Rob Roy, Jack Henstridge they both have excellent books as well as hands on traing courses if u so desire. I was able to build a 12x24 CW cabin with a living roof , with no mechanical assistance other than a chainsaw and a pick-up truck for hauling. We built this cabin in under 3 months. Underroof, it was warm a cozy. It felt like u were in a fortress. Someone said bulletproof might seem appealing..well with CW u can use up to 24" log sections ..making the wall 2 foot thick!! Hows that for bullet proof? There is even a technique for severly cold climates where a double wall of 24" logs are laid making it a total of 4ft thick!!! In my opinion stick built homes are a waste of materials and they r very inefficeint when it comes to heating and cooling. BTW it took us 1 1/2 cords of wood to heat that cabin for 4 months thru an ohio winter hows that for effient ?

A lot of what you say is true but there are some realities. A conventional framed home right now ,say 32 x40, materials will be around 12-15,000. It will be around 10,000 board ft (It might be less than that. Been a while. )
A 32 x40 cordwood with 16" walls will use about 21000 bd ft of lumber. Now if you got trees that aren't all that good and lots of time. But to cut up that much good lumber , even at 1.00 a board ft is not cheap nor is it the best. I can make a lot of nice furniture out of that 10,000 ft of lumber
Don't get me wrong I like cord wood. I like the yurts we built in Breckenridge,CO on top of the mt. I prefer post and beam with sips panels.
The other thing is you have exposed end grain and the logs are gonna dry and split. That lets bugs in ! And if your in a freeze thaw cycle then you are gonna have to be doing constant maintenance to keep it up. Filling crackss and repairing mortar. Unless you use all cedar,white oak or something similar. But you still have the mortar to deal with. End grain sucks up moisture and will eventually rot unless kept treated.

THINGS are made specifically for framed houses. There si very little I know that is made for cordwood. Not that it can't be adapted and prepared for.

All the cordwood homes I know are on a slab. So then you have extra expense for plumbing and heating. Especially if you have to repair.

I hope you enjoy your cord wood. I have been thinking about a couple of buildings out of it. But i have gnarly trees. . and there is nothing in the floor. But dollar for dollar you can't beat a simple framed house. UNLESS as you said you got LOTS of time and don't mind the upkeep.

__________________Thinking is hard. Feeling and believing a storyline is easy.

It pretty much has articles and ideas for just about everything already listed here and more. (cob; strawbale; earthbermed, tire-filled "earthships; papercrete; ferro-cement; domes - you name it) It will be a springboard to a lot of other places you might want to look at.

We are personally building a kind of hybrid design we worked out for ourselves. Its basically a combination of timberframe and stawbale with a ferro-cement shell (for strength and storm resistance - since we are in tornado alley). It also has a living roof.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=kusl1OImy8w
Ours will be a bit different, though. Ours will have no basement, it's 40 x 50 with a second floor about 2/3 of that for a total of 3500sf. We'll be building on a concrete slab with hydronic radiant floor heat. With 3" spray foam insulation it should be easy to heat.

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here in ohio i have seen more then a few barns turned into houses an they look pretty cool i think . got few books on cordwood houses they seem pretty nice as well wouldnt mind getting see one on insife just see what it like. as to cheap lumber if you live near sawmills you can get pretty good prices on rough cut lumber there bunch around area i live in an i called other day check price was told 40 cents a board for no matter what it is you get what they got cut at the time

Give me a concrete home! I have dreamed of this for years. Built correctly, they can apparently withstand an F5 tornado (according to the research done at Texas Tech). It's not the tornadoes that bother me.....it's the potential maiming and/or death from the flying debris.

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